8 Cool Things about the Kindle Touch

I’ve had my Kindle Touch for almost two weeks, and I’m head over heels in love with this e-reader. Sure, there are things I wish were different about it, such as a faster web browser (don’t count on doing much browsing), but I knew what I wouldn’t like about it going in. No surprises. One thing that did surprise me was I bought mine at Wal-Mart. I just felt better buying local where I could take it back if it was a lemon, without hassling with shipping. And it helped me take the step to actually pluck down the money if I knew I could take it back in fifteen days.

For those who find an e-reader in their stocking this Christmas morning, or like me, got it early, here’s eight pretty sweet things you might want to know:

1. Send personal documents for free. This is super cool. I can send my current work in progress (WIP) to my Kindle and read/make notes on the go. It also gives me a different look at the words, similar to printing it out. (Saves me bookoos of paper and ink)

Now, there are two ways to send docs to a Kindle. The first will cost you money. But if you know me, I pinch every penny til the copper bleeds. (It took a month to talk myself into actually buying my Kindle)

Read through Amazon’s instructions here to the part about sending to the “free” address. Super cool.

2. Instant dictionary. I use this often to make sure I understand the meaning of a word, especially if it doesn’t seem to fit the context. The Kindle Touch comes with two dictionaries. All you have to do is press on a word for a few seconds and the definition pops up with the option to read the full text. You can go right back to reading where you left off. No losing your place.

3. Highlight/note. I like the ability to highlight and make a note. You can even touch the upper right hand corner to mark a page. This is helpful when I want to share something in the book with someone later. It’s easy to find the place again.

4. Experimental browser. No, it’s not fast and can’t read every web page, but I can get on Facebook and Hotmail, the main sites I visit in between work or reading. It’s Wi-Fi, and while I’m on that, let me say that the 3G version would be $50 wasted for me. You can ONLY use the 3G to access Amazon’s store for instant book purchasing. Useful for someone who travels often or doesn’t have Wi-Fi at home, but for otherwise, not too helpful.

5. Collections. I have my books sorted in collections, making it a cinch to find the book I want. You can put the same book under more than one category. There are two ways to move books around: One, press and hold on the book, then select what you want to do. Two, go to the collection, tap the top of the screen and tap Menu, then Add/Remove Books.

6. Font size. I don’t have trouble seeing things up close, well, as long as it’s ten inches or less from my nose. With my Kindle, I set the font on a nice middle size that doesn’t take too much page turning yet allows my eyes to relax and read.

7. Social sharing. I haven’t done this, but I’m sure I will. How often I’ve read a passage and wanted to share it on Facebook, but by the time I get online, I forget to do it.

8. Library books. You can check out e-books from any library where you hold a card at and that offers them. That does not include my beloved county library that just got Wi-Fi this year. It may take them awhile. In the meantime, I do have a card at the Tomball College Library (long story, I may share sometime if you ask). They DO have e-books, and I can’t wait to check out some Karen Kingsbury.

In summary: With my Kindle Touch it’s just plain fun and easy to read. But I still can’t stop myself from buying paperbacks, going to the library, and using classic hardbacks to decorate my shelves and desk.

What about you? Have you taken the leap to get an e-reader yet, or do you think you will?

A year ago, I said I never would.

 

For Him,

Sarah Elisabeth

 

P.S. If you haven’t already, grab a copy of my e-book (yes, I published one before I ever had an e-reader) Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions. If you have, I pray you were blessed, encouraged and left with more hope than you had before.

Update: I now have several ebooks on Amazon, including Third Side of the Coin (A Short Story Collection) with the original 7 flash fictions plus dozens more.

Amazon for Kindle: Third Side of the Coin (A Short Story Collection)

Do You Like Me?

  Well, not me exactly. My new Facebook fan page! I finally have Sarah Elisabeth Writes up and running, looking smart with the welcome page featuring my first ebook cover. Here are 7 reasons to “LIKE” my fan page:

1. I’ll post things on it not available on my personal page

2. Occasionally, I’ll hold a drawing exclusively for fans of the page

3. I’m starting a series called “A Thousand Reasons to Praise God.” Be encouraged and join in with your reason of the day!

4. You can easily share my writing with your Facebook friends by inviting them to “LIKE” the page

5. When I need beta readers, I’ll ask my fans first

6. About once a month, I post one of my flash fiction stories

7. I’ll like you forever and ever!

That’s enough reasons to “LIKE” my fan page, right? I hope so, because I don’t want to take up anymore of your time talking about it. Oh, and thanks!

 

For Him,

Sarah Elisabeth

Facebook.com/SarahElisabethSawyer

 

My E-book Release

  As a writer, I should have some creative way to introduce my first e-book to the world, right? Wrong. Here’s the best I can do with trembling fingers and gritted teeth.

These seven flash fictions are to give people who are unfamiliar with my writing a chance to try it for .99 cents. It also gives “fans” something to tide them over until the Complete Collection is finished, which should satisfy everyone until my first novella is released, which should then hold everyone over until my first novel dazzles the world, lol.

See? I have it all planned. And it begins with Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions.

Available on Amazon for Kindle: Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions

Available on Barnes & Noble for Nook: Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions

 

More Details:

The production of an e-book for an indie author is emotionally, physically, and time draining. I formatted the book myself, a wonderful romp through HTML land with the guidance of Guido Henkel. My hat’s off to this man (though I don’t endorse horror novels). He personally answered all my questions via his blog and through email. If you decide to publish an e-book and don’t want to tackle the formatting yourself, I recommend you hire this expert.

Then there was the cover design. Wow. My mama, Lynda Kay, went through headache after headache with that, tweaking, redesigning, changing font, adding layer after layer after layer. She used the freebie, Paint.net, to create it from this free stock photo:

All that to say, our only resources were time and heart to invest in this project. Which brings me to the stories themselves.

They were written, edited, read by third parties, self-edited, edited by my mom, who passed them back to me, sent back to her, back to me, back to—anyway, I lost count. Then most of the stories went to my dear friend, Rachel Phelps for editing. Back to me, back to my mom, back to me, back to my mom…

Even after they received the green light from everyone, and I began formatting, I was still editing.

Tested in the Kindle app on my computer, I began the upload process on Amazon’s Kindle Direct Publishing. I checked the preview of the doc and the cover picture. Things weren’t right and I sent more emails and texts with cries of help. Not sure if it was just a lousy, inaccurate preview, I finally clicked publish. Next thing I did? Sobbed. For ten minutes. Not from joy, unfortunately, but because I wondered if I’d done everything wrong and failed miserably, forced to go back to square one. I had to wait until the book finished the review process—the next day. The thing that got me through the night? Prayer. God granted me peace and patience.

The first time I saw my e-book on Amazon, I squealed. The cover was fine. I checked the interior. Off center. I cried. Sent another email to Guido with my source file. He pointed out potential problems. I corrected those, and uploaded again. Another long wait. I checked. It seemed to have updated, but the preview was still off center. I left it alone, checked back a couple of hours later, refreshed, and…cried. It was perfect.

With all the bugs worked out, the upload to Barnes & Noble went smoothly.

After all that, I’m offering this e-book at .99 cents. Why? Because it’s a labor of love, a learning experience. My prayer that goes with each copy is that God will reach His hand through the words and touch the heart of the reader.

That’s my writing dream.

Months of work–was it worth it? Yes. Every critique, every frustrated “I can’t do it.” Every moment, every tear.

But let patience have its perfect work, that you may be perfect (mature) and complete, lacking nothing. James 1:4 (NKJV)

Please share this blog post with your friends and family, via email, your blog, Facebook, Twitter or whatever your favorite outlet. My desire is to see as many people touched by these stories as possible.

I hope you enjoy Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions.

 

For Him,

Sarah Elisabeth

 

Available on Amazon for Kindle: Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions

Available on Barnes & Noble for Nook: Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions

 

 Third Side of the Coin, Seven Flash Fictions

Heart pounding. Heart wrenching. Heart tugging. Raw and realistic, these short stories show a third side of the coin.

With the gift to find real meaning in a story, award-winning author Sarah Elisabeth creates tales to stir the heart and evoke deep, often buried emotions. Not one to shy away from tragedy or crisis of faith, she explores human conditions through engaging short stories.

“Sarah, your writing is so clear and evocative that there are moments I forget I'm reading and just experience the story.” Rachel Phelps, Multi Award-Winning Master Author

Third Side of the Coin (Seven Flash Fictions) contains seven gripping short stories, and is a prelude to Third Side of the Coin, Complete Collection.

 

These seven titles include:

I’d Rather Die—Faithwriters.com Editor’s Choice. In a few minutes, a woman must decide to deny her faith, or die.

People need to read this story.” Jessica Turner-Stotz, Fan

Everything—After turning his life over to Jesus Christ, a man learns his greatest battles are yet to come.

“The raw emotion of your story is incredible. I lived this exact story with my own wife over the last year. Your words couldn't possibly be more accurate.” Gerald Shuler, Flash Fiction Master

Forgotten—Faithwriters.com Editor’s Choice. The lonely elderly. Forgotten by God?

“This story touched me in ways you will never know. Thank you.” Cheryl Harrison, Blogger

Secure—Faithwriters.com Editor’s Choice. A grandmother struggles to connect with the estranged granddaughter now in her care.

“Pain and the promise of healing is so alive—yet restrained—in this very sensitive piece.” Noel Mitaxa, South Eastern Australian Pastor

Understanding—The impact a letter can have—on the sender as well as the recipient.

“The more I talk about my past suicide attempts, the more I open up. You may never know the difference you might make in one's life by penning these words.” Shann Hall-LochmannVanBennekom, Writer and Mother

Scarred—Truly redeemed? A woman reaches out to help a former heroin addict begin her new journey.

“This is an adult piece with raw emotions and an ugly all-too-human subject. You offered God's grace...” Mona Purvis, Retired Executive

Third Side of the Coin—A foolish error costs one news reporter more than her career.

“Your character's pain was raw…I could feel it, see it.” Lollie Hofer, Teacher

How to Buy Amazon, Barnes & Noble E-books Without an E-reader

  As I prepare to release my first 99 cent e-book on Thursday, I thought I should post step-by-step instructions for reading my e-book with a computer app (you don’t need an ereader).

First, to sign up for an Amazon account, go to Amazon.com, and click the New Customer tab.

Follow the instructions. Once that’s complete, go back to Amazon’s homepage. On the left sidebar, you’ll see Kindle listed:

 

Click on the free reading apps. Select your device and follow the download instructions.

Once your app is downloaded, you’re ready to buy e-books on Amazon. (psst, there are lots of great free e-books on Amazon as well!)

It’s basically the same for Barnes and Noble. Their e-book reading app is called the Nook.

Voila! That should do it, but if not, let me know and I’ll elaborate.

The official launch will take place Thursday on the blog and Facebook!

 

For Him,

Sarah Elisabeth

 UPDATE: My e-book is now available!

Amazon for Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Third-Seven-Flash-Fictions-ebook/dp/B0061LRIZC/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1320952712&sr=8-1

Barnes & Noble for Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/third-side-of-the-coin-seven-flash-fictions-sarah-elisabeth/1107045367

My First eBook Cover!

 

Okay, I suddenly realized I hadn’t even posted this creation on my blog. What’s up with that? Without further ado, here’s my first ebook cover, designed by my mama, Lynda Kay Sawyer. What do you think?

 

For Him,

Sarah Elisabeth